The Gulf of Mexico is set to be renamed “Gulf of America” by Google after US president Donald Trump ordered the name change just hours after taking office.
The change will be visible in the US, with both names appearing to Google Maps users outside of the country. In Mexico, it will remain the Gulf of Mexico.
The US officially changed the name of the Gulf of Mexico to the Gulf of America, and the Alaskan peak Denali, the tallest mountain in North America, to Mount McKinley, Trump’s team said last week.
“The Gulf of Mexico will now officially be known as the Gulf of America and North America’s highest peak will once again bear the name Mount McKinley,” the Interior Department said.
Google Maps, which is owned by tech giant Alphabet, will make a similar change with Mount McKinley once it is officially updated in the US Geographic Names System.
The mountain was named Mount McKinley until 2015, when president Barack Obama’s administration changed it to Denali as a symbolic gesture to Alaska Natives.
“We’ve received a few questions about naming within Google Maps,” the company said in an X post on Monday.
“We have a longstanding practice of applying name changes when they have been updated in official government sources.”
Mexican president Claudia Sheinbaum earlier this month jokingly suggested North America be renamed “Mexican America“ – a historic name used on an early map of the region.
Google has applied the same locale-based labeling conventions to other locations subject to naming disputes.
Outside of Japan and South Korea, the body of water bordering both nations is listed as the “Sea of Japan (East Sea).”
In 2012, Iran threatened to take legal action against Google over its decision to drop the term “Persian Gulf” from Google Maps.
The company left the waterway between Iran and the Arabian peninsula nameless. The body of water is now labeled “Persian Gulf (Arabian Gulf)” in other countries.